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Introduction
CASLO XXIII was held in Ottawa, Ontario. A record 36 players took part over three
days, May 17-19, 2019. The tournament featured a strong field, with 5 former
tournament winners present, including the two-time defending champ. We also
welcomed a number of first time CASLO participants, some from the local gaming
community and others from across the continent. Many thanks to all for coming
out and making it a great event!
Sponsors and Prizes
Once more our loyal sponsors were very generous: everyone was going home with
a prize. Many thanks to Battleschool, Lone Canuck Publishing, MMP, LFT, BFP, Alex
Key’s Hobbies and Games, and Broken Ground Design for their support and
friendship. As well, two local gamers, Rob MacDonald (dice-tower) and Steve
Hewitt (Canadian Sherman tank model) contributed special prizes.
Game On!
The tournament opened Friday at noon with the traditional toast to Jim McLeod,
founder of the CASLO tournament. As part of the tradition, a wee dram of Scotch
was offered to all, and with spirits lifted, play began.
Round 1: The Fat Lady Sings
This round featured late war scenarios. But it wasn’t all monster AFVs and special weapons. Tin cans showed up, captured weapons were central, and second line troops and Partisans played their parts as occupied countries rose up to help their liberators while the Third Reich tried to land its last punches. CASLO pits the top half of the field against the bottom half in this round. All 5 scenario options were played with Axis players holding a 12-5 advantage over the Allies, due to a perfect 6-0 records in SP259 Corridor to Extinction. Defense!
Round 2: Canada
Scenarios in this round covered Canadian attacks in
Italy, starting in December ’43, and across France,
with a final scenario seeing them defend against a
German counterattack in the last months of the war.
Sturmtigers, Kangaroos, Crocodiles, deluxe boards,
HASL maps, HIPsters, OBA and Mines were just some
of the ingredients that players mixed together in
search of victory. Our boys had a 10-6 record in this
round, with the attacking and defending side each
claiming 8 victories. Canadian players held a 3-2
against non-Canadians (aka Americans), with both
US victories coming while playing the Canadian side.
Four of five scenarios were played with MWT7 The
Streets of Carpiquet, played on deluxe boards, being
the crowd favourite.
Round 3: Gurkhas!
Now things began to get serious; after two pleasant rounds on Friday, Saturday
morning started to separate the best from the rest. And what better way to
separate than by Gurkha! Set in Italy, Tunisia and Burma, against German, Italian
and Japanese forces, round 3 scenarios required the Gurkhas to attack in close
quarters, hold their ground and carry out fighting withdrawals. Three of the
scenarios were set in PTO terrain. While several were quite small, two of them
featured 15-20 squads per side. It was time to find out if it’s okay for Gurkhas to
bring a knife to a gunfight!
And the results were the most even round so far. The Gurkha sides went 7-10 with
the Attacking sides going 9-8. After the fighting was done, 5 players stood 3-0: Keith
Hill, George Kelln, Jean-Pierre Raymond, Bruce Stevenson, and Jeff Wasserman.
Round 4: Tin Cans
From the first weeks of the war to September ’42, round 4 featured scenarios using
8 different nationalities, each trying to use their underwhelming AFVs to secure
victory. Tin Cans abounded in battles on 3 continents. And there was more: air
support, PTO, simultaneous setup, OBA, and armor leaders gave players different
choices to achieve their missions.
Despite all those options, most players choose Kotovskij, Russia as their hill to die
on: 11 of the 17 games played J130 The Art of Dying, including virtually all of the
top matches. It was a day for the Allies: as shooting stopped in the early hours of
Sunday, the Allies had 12 victories, all of them achieved in defense.
And then there were three 4-0: Keith, Jean-Pierre, and Jeff.
Round 5: Something New
The idea behind this round was to give players something new: two were from new HASL releases and featured special SSRs which are included. Two more were set during the Korean War and required Forgotten War counters. Players focused on one of the HASL scenarios as HF6 Jackpot Jones got 9 players, including both matches with the 4-0 players to determine the new CASLO Champion. This round went well for the Allies who won 12 times.
In the championship matches, Jean-Pierre Raymond won as the Allies, while Jeff Wasserman won as the Axis. Under CASLO rules, players get 10 points for a win and 1 bonus point for each game won by the opponents that the player beats. The player with the most points wins the tournament. In 2019, that victory went to Jean-Pierre Raymond on the strength of one extra bonus point!
TD Doug Rimmer (left) presents award to 2019 CASLO Champion Jean-Pierre Raymond
Scenario Analysis Of the 25 scenarios offered in the 5 rounds, 20 were played, showing a strong, balanced set of choices. From those 20, 11 had at least three playings each. Disappointingly, in round 5 neither of the two scenarios set during the Korean War were selected. Overall, Allied players went 46-38 with over half of those wins coming in the last two rounds while Attacking players were 37-47, having been thumped in both rounds 1 and 4.
Thank yous First of all, a big thank you to all of our registered players, from near and far. Everyone of you was a great addition to the tournament. CASLO moves from city to city each year. I hope to see many of you again next year wherever we are, and when CASLO comes back to Ottawa in the near future. Many people from Ottawa helped and in particular Rob MacDonald, Denis Leclair, Rene Cote, Reg Plummer, Adrian Earle, Chris Doary, Steve Hewitt, and James Rimmer all made important contributions. My two CASLO colleagues, Michael Rodgers and Darren Kovacs were also of great assistance in the months leading up to the tournament.
Thanks for the memories! Doug Rimmer CASLO XXIII Tournament Director